2017 Jeep Concepts at the Easter Jeep Safari in Moab
Seven Jeeps, countless Easter eggsOnce again this spring the Red Rock 4-Wheelers are playing host to what will be the 51st annual Easter Jeep Safari on the rugged trails outside Moab in southeastern Utah. Although the event is open to all high-clearance low-range-equipped 4WD vehicles, Jeep is right there in the name. Once again the brand will have a big presence on the Safari's trails and campsites. A total of seven concept vehicles will be on hand demonstrating the brand's off-road cred and showing off its design chutzpah—as well as the designers' ability to hide little Jeep icon "Easter eggs" in odd places.
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More Easter Jeep Safari Concepts:
By far this year's most outrageous off-roader is this vaguely Wrangler Rubicon-based little hellion inspired by '60s gasser hot rods of yore. Dig the 4-inch chopped roof and bobbed tail, the Moon tank in front (which here houses a Warn winch), the fenderwell headers with trumpet cutouts (exhaust can be routed through a conventional muffler), the custom Halibrand knockoff look-alike wheels wrapped in 32-inch front and 37-inch rear BFGoodrich Mud-Terrain T/A tires, and the parachute bag in the back (which just carries recovery cables). Power comes from a 392 Crate Hemi with Borla tall-stack injection, featuring intake trumpets that poke through the giant window in the hood (which articulates forward and down to open). The Dana 44 front and Dana 60 rear axles are moved forward and aft, respectively. Look closer, and you notice little design surprises and delights such as the shift knob that is a little red Jeep encased in acrylic, round tail lamps suspended in larger round holes in the bodywork, the top-hinged bottom-venting windshield glass, twin fuel fillers leading to the central fuel cell with caps reading "Detroit Rocket Fuel Only," and the CNC milled fender badges reading "X Rated 4x4" on the driver side and "Hemi Crated 392" on the passenger side.
In celebration of the impending 25th anniversary of the Grand Cherokee as we know it, the Jeep design team went out, found a presentable 1993 ZJ-generation Grand Cherokee, and very tastefully updated it while retaining the original 5.2-liter V-8 (upgraded only with a cold-air intake and freer-flowing exhaust). To tackle Moab's toughest trails, it gets a 2-inch lift with Dana 44 axles on new suspension links that effectively move the front axle 2 inches forward and the rear axle 1 inch aft. It also receives 33-inch BFGoodrich Mud-Terrain KM2 tires wrapping 18-inch lace wheels that sort of ape those of the original. The stock rocker panels are clad in heavy-gauge steel rock-rail material painted body color. Styling touches include enlarged fender flares to cover the repositioned tires, a revised grille with numerals counting the eight slots, and a very subtle half-tone wood grain applique that pays homage to the short-lived ZJ Grand Wagoneer. Inside there's a plaid flannel headliner, a hard-wired car phone, and a Game Boy in the back seat. Oh, and there's aBaywatchsticker on the driver door inner panel proclaiming "Hoff Tested, Hoff Approved." Nice.













